The man also worked as a police officer when he sexually abused boys
A former scout leader who abused teenage boys across three decades has been jailed. Derek Feast, 81, denied multiple indecent assaults on four teenage boys when Hertfordshire Police traced and interviewed him in July 2024.
Feast denied having sexual conduct with three of the boys, and claimed he had been in a consensual sexual relationship with the other victim. One of the assaults took place at a Norfolk newsagents in 1991. Feast worked there aged 46, and sexually assaulted a 14-year-old boy.
On Wednesday (April 22) at St Albans Crown Court, Feast, now of the Isle of Mull in Scotland, was sentenced to 12 years in prison after being convicted for multiple offences at the same court on February 17. These were: 17 counts of indecent assault and gross indecency on four victims. He was also placed on the sex offenders’ register for life.
The court heard how he targeted three of his victims when he volunteered with the Scouts in Hertfordshire, where he also worked as a police officer during the 1970s and early 1980s. The fourth victim, in Norfolk, was sexually assaulted in July 1991. The boy reported the incident to police and Feast was arrested, but no further action was taken.
Another victim, who was aged 12 or 13 at the time, recalled being sexually assaulted on Scout trips, at Scout meetings and at Feast’s home address in Stevenage. A third victim, who was aged 14, was also sexually assaulted by Feast.
A final victim was sexually assaulted by Feast when he was 15, while on a trip and the abuse continued for several years. Detective Constable Beverley Thomson said: “Firstly, I would like to commend all four victims for their courage during the investigation and their incredible bravery in the face of a trial.
“Derek Feast denied any wrongdoing, but his evil acts have had lasting effects on his victims, but I do hope that seeing him sentenced will go some way in helping them to move on from his abhorrent crime.
“We know it can be incredibly challenging to come forward to report incidents of sexual assault. We take reports of sexual offences very seriously and we will do everything we can to ensure that victims feel like their voices are heard and that offenders are brought to justice.”
Detective Inspector Ben Smith added: “I would like to thank the team for their tireless work to bring Feast to justice. This case demonstrates that however long ago a crime was committed – even more than 40 years later – we will track you down and get justice for victims.
“The fact that he was a Scout leader and, shockingly, a police officer at the time, makes his offending even more despicable and I hope any victim feels confident that they can report offences however long ago they were committed, and we will take them seriously and work tirelessly to bring them justice.”
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